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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/14148
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dc.contributor.authorDonaldson, Ross Georgeen_US
dc.date.accessioned2014-06-18T17:06:27Z-
dc.date.available2014-06-18T17:06:27Z-
dc.date.created2014-05-12en_US
dc.date.issued1994-07en_US
dc.identifier.otheropendissertations/8977en_US
dc.identifier.other10057en_US
dc.identifier.other5568641en_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11375/14148-
dc.description.abstract<p>This work offers a reading of George Eliot's last two novels, Middlemarch and Daniel Deronda. The thesis challenges the place both Realist critics and post-structuralist theorists ordinarily assign to these two novels in literary history. It does so by locating these works in the context of a number of important contemporaneous developments in pathology, comparative anatomy, evolutionary biology, geology and the philosophy of scientific method. In each of these fields there was a growing sense of the formative and constitutive function of method in any inquiry. This discursive conception of the necessary dependence of the answer on the nature of the question poses a challenge to the purported neutrality and transparency of what has been conceived as literary Realism. I argue here that Middlemarch and Daniel Deronda, though they are novels which traditionally have been placed within literary Realism, actually incorporate these contemporaneous developments in epistemology. Though these novels do not eschew didacticism, their awareness of methodological changes in a variety of scholarly fields modifies the nature of narrative authority vouchsafed by making it provisional and historically specific.</p>en_US
dc.subjectEpistemlogyen_US
dc.subjectMiddlemarchen_US
dc.subjectDaniel Derondaen_US
dc.subjectEnglish Language and Literatureen_US
dc.titleA Serious House on Serious Earth: Epistemology in Middlemarch and Daniel Derondaen_US
dc.typethesisen_US
dc.description.degreeDoctor of Philosophy (PhD)en_US
Appears in Collections:Open Access Dissertations and Theses

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